Julianne Hough searched red hot since she marketed the woman's brand new movie "Safe Haven" during a photocall inside london Feb. 19.

Joined by the girl co-star Josh Duhamel, Ryan Seacrest's 24-year-young enjoyed the show off some sideboob and several knocker eye-port in a low-cut jumpsuit by simply Bec & Link. Mention a new plunging neck line!

Also it appeared from one point Hough understood she was exposing a lot of pores and skin, cozying up to Duhamel along with protecting your ex chest muscles since your woman laughed to the video cameras.

In a nation sharply divided over efforts to curb violence and the right to bear arms, both sides of the gun debate seem to agree on at least one thing: a bigger role for the insurance industry in a heavily armed society.

But just what that role should be, and whether insurers will choose to accept it, are very much in dispute.

Lawmakers in at least half a dozen states, including California, Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York and Pennsylvania, have proposed legislation this year that would require gun owners to buy liability insurance — much as car owners are required to buy auto insurance. Doing so would give a financial incentive for safe behavior, they hope, as people with less dangerous weapons or safety locks could qualify for lower rates.

“I believe that if we get the private sector and insurance companies involved in gun safety, we can help prevent a number of gun tragedies every year,” said David P. Linsky, a Democratic state representative in Massachusetts who wants to require gun owners to buy insurance. He believes it will encourage more responsible behavior and therefore reduce accidental shootings. “Insurance companies are very good at evaluating risk factors and setting their premiums appropriately,” he added.

Groups representing gun owners oppose efforts to make insurance mandatory, arguing that law-abiding people should not be forced to buy insurance to exercise their constitutional right to bear arms. But some groups, including the National Rifle Association, endorse voluntary liability policies for their members. And as several states pass laws making it easier for people to carry concealed weapons and use them for self-defense, some gun groups are now selling policies to cover some of the legal costs stemming from self-defense shootings.

Reports suggest that seven French hostages kidnapped in Cameroon put together alive and safe in the house in northern Nigeria on Thursday are false, a Nigerian military spokesman said.

"It's not true," said Sagir Musa, spokesman for military Joint Task Force in Borno state, the place that the hostages were reported to have been released.

France's minister for veterans' affairs told parliament some children and three adults abducted from Cameroon on Tuesday have been released, then minutes later said there were no official confirmation they had been freed.